From Russia With Love
U.K. / 1963
Directed by Terence Young
Starring
Sean Connery
Daniela Bianchi
Robert Shaw
Color / 115 Minutes / PG
Format: DVD (R1 - NTSC)
MGM Home Entertainment
Commander Bond's first naval action.
Hold your mouse pointer over an image for a pop-up caption
Kronsteen: The Brain.
Number One: The Puppetmaster.
Grant: The Muscle.
Klebb: The Controller.
Tatiana: The Honey Trap.
The Target: James Bond.
Hot run to Trieste.
Klebb gets her kicks.
New 2006 Utimate Edition
From Russia With Love
Action-packed
Cult Classic
Movie Rating  
8
  DVD Rating   10   10 = Highest Rating  
Guest Review by Rod Barnett
One year after the release of Dr. No and its worldwide success, EON productions returned to Ian Fleming's superspy series with From Russia With Love. Once again hewing very close to the source novel, they produced a compact, witty film that combines the finer qualities of Fleming's work with the sophisticated sense of style that director Terence Young brought to the Bond pictures.
   
Again the story focuses on the international terrorist organization SPECTRE and its ongoing criminal activities. Ernst Blofeld, the leader of the organization, is first introduced here(seen only from behind), devising a smart Cold War plot to pit Britain's MI-6 against the Soviet KGB for profit and to exact revenge for the death of their agent Doctor No. Ex-KGB official and new SPECTRE member Rosa Klebb (Lotte Lenya) is put in charge of a scheme to get James Bond to steal a Russian Lektor code machine, which she will then take from him. The plan is simple get beautiful, low level Soviet embassy employee Tatiana Romanova (Daniela Bianchi) to feign love for Bond and promise the Lektor in exchange for British citizenship and James' company. Miss Romanova is based in Istanbul and has daily contact with the encryption device, so she will be able to be convincing as a mole. Since it isn't common knowledge that Klebb has left Soviet employment it's a simple matter for her to force Tatiana into the ruse without the girl realizing she's helping SPECTRE rather than Mother Russia. Knowing that something so obvious has to be a trap, secret service chief M (Bernard Lee) still sends Bond to Turkey on the off chance they might get the machine. In Istanbul Bond makes contact with Kerim Bey (Pedro Armendariz), the head of British operations for the country. Bey tells Bond that he should enjoy his stay in Turkey as a vacation because the chances of this defection being real are ridiculous. But almost immediately SPECTRE assassin Red Grant (Robert Shaw) launches attacks on both sides to manipulate the situation to the terrorists' advantage. When a bomb goes off in Bey's office, the escalation of violence convinces the agents that something must be done and makes them both realize this mission isn't going to be a milk run. Hastily Bond and Bey firebomb the Soviet Embassy and spirit the Lektor and Tatiana aboard the Orient Express, heading west. But Grant is following close behind, with orders to kill both of them and claim the Lektor.
    From Russia With Love is one of my favorite films in the Bond series. It's serious, clever and never descends to the cartoonish levels of some the later movies. Viewed as part of the series it is a slight improvement over Dr. No with better pacing and a more interesting plot. Strangely, the idea of SPECTRE pitting rival nations against each other is not taken from the book. In the novel it's the Russian spy agency SMERSH that puts the plot in motion but I really prefer the movie's twist as it adds a level of nastiness that I like in espionage stories. Amidst Bond's interlude with a band of gypsies, his careful romance of Tatiana, and the sly machinations of Grant as he gooses Bond along, there's a smart undercurrent of exactly what I like to see in spy tales. Both Bond and Grant are very intelligent and know that at times they are being played, but also feel that they are good enough at their jobs to win through. Watching smart people battle each other in a logical way is the best part of a well-written spy thriller. One of the things this film does well
that other Bond films don't is focus on the human element in the story.
    As the series progressed there was a tendency to focus on the action and spectacle until at times the motivations and the plot became nothing more than a thin trail of crumbs linking giant stunt pieces. From Russia With Love is the antithesis of that approach and serves as a good template for what the current Bond producers should strive for. This film keeps the audience in their seats with suspense and character instead of chases and explosions. Of course, the film does have a few pyrotechnics but the most memorable action scene is the incredibly brutal fistfight between Bond and Grant in the small confines of a train compartment. (That's a far cry from a laser gun battle in low Earth orbit!)     This film also sports two firsts for the series: the first pre-credits sequence and the first appearance of Desmond Llewelyn as Q, here called by his actual name, Major Boothroyd. The importance of Q to the films is obvious to those of us who love the gadgets, but it was amazing to learn that the pre-credit bit was not originally planned. Editor Peter Hunt came up with the idea when piecing the film together. Never let it be said that film editing isn't a creative or crucial job!

MGM's From Russia With Love DVD is fantastic. It shows a great amount of care and pride. The film looks and sounds great with the image letterboxed at about 1.75:1; the original Mono soundtrack doing a very good job of presenting every gunshot, grunt and moan in digital clarity. But as good as the film itself is, it's in the extras department that the disc really shines.
    First there is another fantastic commentary track hosted by John Cork that pulls together remarks from director Terence Young, editor Hunt and a host of other members of the cast and crew. Once again proving that this type of track is the best, Cork guides us smoothly through a mountain of detail that serves to enhance our appreciation of the movie's many accomplishments. I can't recommend the commentary track enough. If it were the only extra this would still be a great DVD, but luckily MGM has gone much, much further.
    There are two documentaries included, an animated storyboard segment that focuses on the boat chase, a still gallery, trailers and radio spots. Whew! The first documentary is called Inside From Russia With Love and in about 35 minutes covers the highs and lows of making the first Bond sequel. It was sad to learn of Pedro Armendariz's illness during production and his death soon afterward. He's so good as Bey that it was a shock to learn just how sick he was at the time and how they had to shoot around him to allow his scenes to be completed.
    The second piece is Harry Saltzman: Showman. This doc presents an affectionate portrait of producer Saltzman through interviews with his children and many of the actors he worked with over the years. It's very informative and although I wasn't interested at first, I found it to be entertaining as I had always wondered why he dropped out of the Bond series in the mid-1970s. 2/10/04
UPDATE OOP for a couple of years, From Russia With Love was reissued in December 2006 by MGM. This completely remastered 2-disc edition — meticulously restored, given a new 5.1 Surround audio mix and featuring additional extras — is a part of The James Bond Ultimate Collection Vol. 3, which also contains four other 007 films. (Audio/visual quality is simply stunning!)
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